## Correct Answer: D. C4a The CEAP classification is the international standard for grading chronic venous disorders (CVD), widely adopted in Indian vascular surgery practice. The clinical (C) component grades severity from C0 (no signs) to C6 (active ulcer). C4 represents skin changes due to CVD, subdivided into C4a (pigmentation, eczema, lipodermatosclerosis without ulceration) and C4b (lipodermatosclerosis and/or atrophie blanche). The patient presents with varicose veins (C2 or higher) AND eczema (dermatitis) localized to the affected region—this is a hallmark of C4a. Eczema in varicose veins results from chronic venous hypertension causing capillary leakage, inflammation, and secondary dermatitis. The absence of ulceration, lipodermatosclerosis, or atrophie blanche excludes C4b. C4a is the precise stage when skin changes appear but tissue loss has not yet occurred, making it the critical discriminator for early intervention in Indian clinical practice to prevent progression to C6. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. C4b** — C4b includes lipodermatosclerosis and/or atrophie blanche—advanced skin changes with fibrosis and tissue remodeling. The question specifies only eczema without mention of lipodermatosclerosis or atrophie blanche, making C4b an overestimation of severity. This trap lures students who conflate all C4 changes into one category. **B. C3** — C3 denotes edema without skin changes—purely swelling of the limb. Eczema is explicitly a skin change (dermatitis), not mere edema. Students may confuse edema with eczema phonetically or forget that C3 excludes dermatological manifestations, making this a common NBE trap. **C. C2** — C2 is varicose veins without skin changes or edema. While the patient has varicose veins, the presence of eczema elevates the classification to C4a. Selecting C2 ignores the eczema entirely and represents incomplete clinical assessment—a classic mistake when students focus only on the primary complaint. ## High-Yield Facts - **C4a** = pigmentation, eczema, lipodermatosclerosis WITHOUT ulceration; **C4b** = lipodermatosclerosis and/or atrophie blanche (more advanced). - **Eczema in varicose veins** results from chronic venous hypertension → capillary leakage → inflammatory dermatitis; it is reversible if CVD is treated early. - **CEAP C-grade** is the strongest predictor of progression to ulceration (C6); C4 patients have ~50% risk of ulceration within 5 years if untreated in Indian cohorts. - **C3 vs C4 distinction**: C3 = edema only; C4 = any skin change (pigmentation, eczema, lipodermatosclerosis, atrophie blanche). - **C4a vs C4b**: C4a is reversible with compression and surgery; C4b (lipodermatosclerosis) indicates chronic fibrosis and higher ulcer risk. ## Mnemonics **C4 Skin Changes: 'PEAL'** **P**igmentation, **E**czema, **A**trophie blanche, **L**ipodermatosclerosis. C4a = first two (P, E); C4b = last two (A, L) or lipodermatosclerosis alone. **CEAP C-grades: '0-2-3-4-6'** C0 = none; C2 = varicose veins; C3 = edema; C4 = skin changes; C6 = ulcer. Skip C1 and C5 in memory—they are rarely tested in NEET PG. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "varicose veins" with C2 to trap students who stop reading after the primary diagnosis and ignore the eczema. The question deliberately mentions eczema last to test whether students integrate all clinical findings into the CEAP grade. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian outpatient vascular clinics, C4a eczema is the red flag for aggressive compression therapy and early surgical intervention (ligation, stripping, or endovenous ablation). Delaying treatment at this stage significantly increases the risk of progression to C6 ulcers, which are notoriously difficult to heal in the Indian climate and socioeconomic context. _Reference: Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (Ch. 60: Venous Disorders); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine (Ch. 243: Venous Thromboembolism and Chronic Venous Disease)_
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